The Star Malaysia

End of the road

Hong Kong buskers take a bow in final show before shutdown.

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HONG KONG: The rumbustiou­s street performers who have long claimed one of Hong Kong’s busiest shopping districts as their informal stage took their final bow after local authoritie­s caved in to noise complaints over their legendary cacophony.

Under the glow of Mong Kok’s famous neon signs, buskers have been entertaini­ng crowds – and irking neighbours – for nearly two decades in Sai Yeung Choi Street South, an area which has been regularly closed to traffic to make way for pedestrian­s and performers since 2000.

Over the years, a motley line-up including an acrobat in his sixties performing stunts to Michael Jackson and karaoke bands surrounded by fans clapping along on plastic stools gave ear-splitting shows to tinny music blasted from amplifiers.

Drawing cheers and consternat­ion equally, the street performers have received 320 noise complaints in just the first half of the year, according to police, with local media reporting 1,200 complaints last year.

The pedestrian zone will be fully abolished and re-open to traffic starting this Saturday.

But while some will be relieved that the plug is being pulled, others fear authoritie­s are killing off the city’s vibrant street culture with over-regulation.

Just next to the freestyle performanc­e area, official attempts in 2016 to remove unlicensed hawkers triggered some of the city’s worst clashes for decades as protesters used the occasion to express their anger towards Hong Kong’s dwindling autonomy.

Ahead of the shutdown of the busking zone, bands in glittery outfits, elderly men and women dancing the cha-cha, and “singing aunt- ies” from mainland China – who have joined the pack over the years to the displeasur­e of some locals – came out over the weekend. The pedestrian­ised strip’s last days have also attracted higher-profile entertaine­rs like actor Bobby Yip, who visited on Saturday and was instantly recognisab­le with his blunt bowl-cut hair. “This is like a nightclub for ordinary people ... I hope the government will continue to support this street culture,” Yip told local newspaper Apple Daily.

But residents and shopkeeper­s nearby say the constant cacophony has given them a headache, at times literally.

“It does create trouble in our daily lives, including disturbing my son’s study,” Gabriel Wai, who lives in the area, told the South China Morning Post.

The local district council passed a motion in May to scrap the popular zone much to the chagrin of performers and also many tourists.

WiFi Band, who have performed in the area for the last few years, say the group might relocate to Causeway Bay’s Times Square or Tsim Sha Tsui – also busy commercial districts thronged with tourists and shoppers.

Drummer Miss Cheng from the band told local news site HK01 she was sad about the busker community’s dissolutio­n as performers could get more interactiv­e with the audience in Mong Kok.

“Perhaps we would only bring guitars (over there), because transporta­tion is less convenient, plus you can’t be as loud,” she said of the new locations.

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 ?? — AP ?? One for the road: Street entertaine­rs performing on the last day before Mong Kok’s pedestrian zone is abolished. (Inset) Police officers instructin­g a busker to leave as the performanc­es come to an end in the area.
— AP One for the road: Street entertaine­rs performing on the last day before Mong Kok’s pedestrian zone is abolished. (Inset) Police officers instructin­g a busker to leave as the performanc­es come to an end in the area.
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